

This will also get the small amount of slime within the fabric fibers. Now that the slimed portion of the couch is flat, you will spot treat it to remove the stain. Freezing and hardening the slime will allow you to scrape the residues again and lift the stuck parts off the fabric fibers smoothly. If you can remove the fabric couch cover, you can also place it in the freezer. Use ice cubes directly on the slime to freeze it. Once you’ve removed the excess slime, you can harden the residues as if you’re getting gum out of the sofa. Any blunt object should work safely and won’t poke through the fabric.

Regardless if the slime has been stuck on the fabric sofa for a while, it would make removal more manageable if you scrape up as much slime as you can.

It was an innocent accident – in fact my daughter had been trying to write a sweet message to her daddy and me on her bed rail with silly putty and it slipped off during the night! – but I still had to leave the room to have a little cry. Well, last night I discovered one of the duvets had silly putty ALL OVER it, on both sides, and particularly on the white part. The price shot up 6× as much a day or 2 after I ordered them! I even had a relative collect the package from our house when it was delivered so it couldn’t be stolen the covers were only $15 but felt “priceless” to me! I was beyond thrilled to finally give my children something they could feel proud of when friends came over, since most everything else we own is shabby. A couple years ago I happened across an amazing deal ($5/ea) on 3 brand new duvet covers that were beautiful, and a perfectly unique design for my daughters. We can’t afford much of anything new, so almost everything we own is used, hand-me-down, cheap, broken/chipped/stained/ripped…and frankly, just plain ugly.
